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It’s Saturday evening, so here are twelve thought-provoking articles to stimulate your thinking juices culled from the 50+ I’ve linked to from my Delcicious account this last week…

Groundhog year – Peter Kellner examines the polls to find how 12 months’ political turmoil has shifted popular opinion. The answer — not at all: ‘public reaction this year to Britain’s continuing economic troubles has been remarkably static. 2012 has been groundhog year.’

What next? Osborne needs a change of direction – Adam Posen, a former member of the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England, lambasts the Chancellor’s failed strategy: ‘For two-and-a-half years, the coalition government’s economic policies have focused on the wrong narrow goal, been self-defeating in pursuit of that goal, and in so doing have eaten away at British economic capabilities and confidence. It is past time for me, and far more importantly for the chancellor, to say so.’

Musical Chairs with Ribbentrop – Bee Wilson‘s brilliant account of the life of Nancy Astor, the first female MP to take her seat in the Commons, but apparently it ‘didn’t impress her much. “I can’t think of anything worse than being among six hundred men none of whom really wanted you there.”‘

Stop banging the vending machine – Tim Harford proposes abolishing BOTH impotent outrage against Starbucks AND corporation tax: ‘to think that a multinational corporation has insulted you is a category error. It’s like thinking a coin-operated machine has stolen money from you. We need to stop banging the vending machine in fury and figure out a better way.’

The party machines might not know it yet but political parties are dying – Peter Watt looks at the death of one type of career politician and the advent of the next type: ‘It may take another few years for the process to complete but it is inevitable that rocking the boat, striving to be seen as an authentic individual and occasionally being prepared to vote against the whip will become more common.’

Discussing the State of the British Media with Ian Hislop – Simon Childs has a wide-ranging, perceptive interview with Private Eye’s editor: ‘if broadsheets become magazines about gardening, cooking and what’s on the telly without news at the heart of it then they may find that they have nothing to sell.’

Why the BBC’s boss had to go – Kevin Marsh, a former BBC editor, dissects the circumstances that led to George Entwistle’s departure and forecasts the future: ‘Once the dust has settled, there’ll be more compliance forms, more compulsory referrals, more systems to ensure anything contentious is signed off at the highest possible level. And more caution.’

It takes a decadent village – The Economist’s Lexington asks if low birth-rates correlate to ‘decadence’ (much more thoughtful than it sounds): ‘I think, as a matter of personal sensibility and conviction, that having children is an extremely important part of interacting with the universe at a level that extends beyond your own immediate circumstances.’

Anatomy of a Twitterstorm – Anya Palmer on the aftermath of tweeters’ nowtrage: ‘What happens when someone tweets a picture of a vile sexist card aimed at 13 year old girls that might have something to do with Hallmark? And what happens when it turns out it doesn’t?’

The Genius of Merkel – Katinka Barysch on why Germans love their chancellor: ‘Merkel is the epitome of German politics … Germans think the ability to create consensus is important for leadership… [and] would probably find most British leaders loud-mouthed, impulsive and unnecessarily combative in style.’